{"product_id":"rolex-oyster-perpetual-datejust-tiger-eye-ref-1601-1974","title":"Rolex Oyster Perpetual Datejust ‘Tiger Eye’ Ref. 1601 (1974)","description":"\u003cp\u003eThe Rolex Datejust is one of the defining forms of modern watchmaking: introduced in 1945 as the first self-winding wristwatch with an automatically changing date window, it established a design grammar that remains instantly legible today—Oyster case, fluted bezel, Cyclops magnifier, and the Jubilee bracelet created expressly for the model. The present example, a 1974 Datejust Ref. 1601 in 18k yellow gold, belongs to the most sought-after era of vintage Datejust production (1959–1977), where proportions, materials, and mechanics reached a particularly balanced maturity.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eIts significance, however, lies in the dial: natural Tiger Eye hardstone, cut and finished from a single piece of stone and prized for its golden-brown chatoyance—parallel bands that animate under light with a silk-like, shifting depth. In the mid-1970s through the 1980s, Rolex produced hardstone dials in extremely limited quantities for its most elevated Datejust and Day-Date configurations (including onyx, lapis lazuli, malachite, coral, opal, and mother-of-pearl). These were never mass-produced; each dial required dedicated stone selection and careful fabrication, with high rejection rates and an inherently low survival rate due to the fragility of the material. As a result, intact examples are both scarce and effectively unique: no two Tiger Eye dials share identical veining.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eInvestment-aware collectors increasingly treat hardstone Rolex dials as a category of their own within the highly liquid vintage Rolex market, supported by transparent public results across major auction platforms. A recent international auction offered a directly comparable configuration—Datejust 1601 in 18k yellow gold with Tiger Eye dial and box—estimated at €20,000–€40,000 and selling for €58,500 (premium included), underscoring the strength of demand and the tendency for competitive bidding to push beyond specialist estimates. Against that benchmark, an entry level of €35,000 positions this watch below the latest public comparable and within conservative auction-estimate territory, while delivering the defining attributes collectors pursue: period-correct reference, full-gold execution, and one of the most visually distinctive and least available hardstone dials of the era.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Collecto Archive","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55938968879444,"sku":"4021","price":38500.0,"currency_code":"EUR","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0975\/9083\/7588\/files\/WhatsAppImage2026-06-08at11.19.05_1.jpg?v=1781532126","url":"https:\/\/collectoarchive.com\/products\/rolex-oyster-perpetual-datejust-tiger-eye-ref-1601-1974","provider":"Collecto Archive","version":"1.0","type":"link"}